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  • Cathlin Barry on Phyllis, 5/27/2010 10:19:00 AM
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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: mariathompsondaviess, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Ads: The Melting of Molly


0 Comments on Ads: The Melting of Molly as of 10/28/2010 9:09:00 AM
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2. Phyllis

The Melting of Molly was nice, but Phyllis was better.

There are some basic similarities — the first-person narration, the particular kind of diary format the author uses, the deliberate obliviousness — but the two books feel fairly different.

Once cause of that, from which most of the others probably follow is that Phyllis is not a widow in her twenties, but a fifteen year old schoolgirl. She starts her diary (which is named Louise) when she and her parents move to the town of Byrdsville for the sake of her mother’s health. It’s never clear what exactly is wrong with the mother, but she’s always been an invalid, she’s going to die soon, and the nurse won’t let her husband and daughter see her because it makes her worse.

Phyllis’ house in Byrdsville is actually thr Byrd Mansion, the ancestral home of the town’s first family. And that would be fine, only there are still some Byrds around, and they’ve moved out to make room for Phyllis and her parents.

There are three Byrds: Roxanne is Phyllis’ age, Douglass is in his early twenties and has been given a job by Phyllis’ father, and Lovelace Peyton, five, who want to be a doctor, and goes around prescribing peculiar remedies for illnesses people don’t have. It’s supposed to be very cute, and it is, I guess.

Anyway, The Byrds are extremely poor, and Phyllis’ father is a millionaire, and when Phyllis arrives in town, she finds that everyone is busy resenting her on the Byrds’ behalf. Things get better when Phyllis and Roxanne become friends, but that doesn’t bring everyone else around all at once.

I could explain the plot, but it’s not what makes this book so charming. Well, except for the bit when someone who everyone believes has stolen something shows up and reprimands the person who it was stolen from for leaving his belongings around so carelessly. That was fun.

It’s more about the way the characters interact, I think. One of the girls in Phyllis and Roxanne’s class is sort of petty and mean sometimes, and instead of having the nicer characters one-up her all the time, Daviess has them just kind of acknowledge her pettiness as a part of her personality that they have to work around.

Another of the girls is designated as the fat, silly one. She goes through most of the book being sweet and forgetful and feeding everyone fudge. THen she overhears a secret, which she inadvertently tells to someone who tells everyone esle in town. And she’s like, “I’m sorry, but I was right there feeding them fudge the whole time, and it’s not my fault they forgot I had ears.” Moments like that excuse a lot of, “Oh, she’s the fat one. She eats a lot.”

Then there’s Phyllis herself. Molly Carter’s obliviousness read as stupidity, especially towards the end of the book. Phyllis’ reads as the naivete of a young girl who hasn’t interacted with a lot of people, and always wants to believe the best of the people she loves. It’s a really nice use of an overused trope, which made it feel kind of Jane Abbott-y — there’s that same sense of a very slightly new take on an old story. And the friendships between Phyllis and her classmates reminded me at times of the Grace Harlowe books, and that was nice too. It’s really just a lovely book.


2 Comments on Phyllis, last added: 5/29/2010
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3. The Melting of Molly

The Melting of Molly is by Maria Thompson Daviess, whose last name really is spelled like that, and it was a bestseller in 1912.

The melting in question is a metaphorical description of Molly falling in love, of course, but it’s nominally meant to refer to weight loss. Molly Carter is a twenty-five year old widow, and this book is supposed to be her diary, written to keep track of her diet and exercise regimes.

Mr. Carter, dead approximately one year, was nobody particularly interesting–just someone Molly married after Al Bennett, the young man she was in love with, had gone off into the world to try and make a name for himself or something. That was when Molly was seventeen, and now Al Bennett, having heard that Mr. Carter is out of the picture, has started sending Molly love letters and talking about coming home. Apparently he expects to see her in the same dress she was wearing when he left, only that was eight years ago, and it doesn’t quite fit. And by “quite” I mean “at all.”

That brings her to Dr. Moore next door, who is very nice about creating a diet for her, even though he thinks she looks like a luscious peach. So in spite of the fact that Molly’s diet, combined with her abandoning mourning clothes, seems to bring half the men in town almost to the point of proposing, you know right from the beginning that it’s the doctor that she’s going to end up with.

Anyway, most of the other suitors eventually get paired off with other girls. And when Al Bennett finally arrives, he turns out to have gotten fat, which makes his insisting that Molly be as slim as she was when she was seventeen seem very silly. Fortunately, there’s another girl who knows and loves him in his current, hefty state, and presumably she comforts him.

And that’s the trouble with this book. It cuts off when you still want to know more, like what happens with Al and Ruth Chester, and what the gossips who populate the town think about Molly’s engagement to the doctor. We don’t even really get to meet Al, which is frustrating, since so much of Molly’s time during the book is taken up with preparing herself for his arrival, and wondering what he’ll think of her.

Still, I like it. It’s sweet and light and very, very fluffy. And Molly is just a little bit on the right side of generic, even though her refusal to see that the doctor is in love with her sometimes strains belief.


0 Comments on The Melting of Molly as of 5/25/2010 1:05:00 PM
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